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Ehrlich Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Ehrlich and links to relevant pages within the course.

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Chemical Screening of Urine by Reagent Strip
Which of the following may cause false negative bilirubin results on a urine reagent strip? (Choose ALL of the correct answers)View Page
Urobilinogen

Urobilinogen is a byproduct of hemoglobin breakdown. It is produced in the intestinal tract as a result of the action of bacteria on bilirubin. Almost half of the urobilinogen produced recirculates through the liver and then returns to the intestines through the bile duct. Urobilinogen is then excreted in the feces where it is converted to urobilin. As the urobilinogen circulates in the blood to the liver, a portion of it is diverted to the kidneys and appears as urinary urobilinogen. Up to 1 mg/dL or Ehrlich unit of urobilinogen is present in normal urine. A result of 2.0 mg/dL represents the transition from normal to abnormal and the patient should be evaluated further. It is important to note that the reagent strip cannot determine the absence of urobilinogen.

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The Test for Urobilinogen

The test for urobilnogen is based on the Ehrlich Aldehyde Reaction. P-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde in an acid medium with a color enhancer reacts with urobilinogen to form a pink-red color. The strip reactivity increases with increasing temperature. The optimum temperature for testing is 22° - 26°C. A freshly voided sample is best for optimal results.

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False Positive Urobilinogen Results

A false positive urobilinogen reaction may occur with the dipstick method when substances known to react with Ehrlich's reagent such as sulfonamides and p-aminosalicylic acid are present in the urine. Drugs that contain Azo dyes, such as Azo Gantrisin®, have a gold color that masks the reaction, causing a false positive reaction. Atypical color reactions may be obtained in the presence of high concentrations of p-aminobenzoic acid. The dipstick urobilinogen test cannot detect porphobilinogen in a urine specimen. Porphobilinogen is a molecule formed during the synthesis of the heme portion of hemoglobin.

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Confirmatory Test

Test results that are 2.0 Ehrlich units or greater can be confirmed using the Watson-Schwartz qualitative test. This test will differentiate between urobilinogen and porphobilinogen.

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The color change in the Ehrlich Aldehyde reaction is:View Page
Which of the following substances cause a false-positive reaction on the urobilinogen portion of the test strip? (Choose ALL of the correct answers)View Page